Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Video, Look! Look!

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Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Video, Look! Look!

Post by grokefish »

I was about to move my chaetostoma into another tank when I found this!
With a FEMALE guarding the eggs.
I have recently upped the temp to 25 degrees to equalise the tems between the tanks and also have been toping up evaporation loss with local tap water so the ph and hardness would go up.
I had just given up on this project when I found this.
Obviously after taking the photo I replaced all as it was.

Image

Matt

[Mod edit x2: fix image tags --Mats]
Last edited by grokefish on 17 Sep 2009, 23:57, edited 4 times in total.
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs!

Post by grokefish »

Mats, I don't know about your computer but on mine the picture is now coming up way too big.

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs!

Post by MatsP »

Yes, it does. If you PM me with the link to the ImageShack view, I'll fix it properly - sorry [but it wasn't working originally either!].

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs!

Post by grokefish »

Will do.

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by grokefish »

Now the male is guarding the eggs, they seem to be taking it in turns1
I hope they hatch. Any ideas on how the hell I will feed them?
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by Richard B »

This is great news - well done :thumbsup:

I suspect their fast flowing natural environment the fry will feed on microscopic organisms - not sure how to best replicate this??? Adding mulm from a mature tank, a rock with algal growth from a mature tank, (which should harbour such microrganisms) or maybe the eggwhite mix painted on a rock...maybe a trial & error job......
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by andywoolloo »

that's def awesome!! congratulations!

when mine were small from the pet store they ate the rock coated in egg white and smashed up fish food. Of course they weren't fry, but I'd say that saved them. Two of them at a least

I bet your mature tank has things in their for them somewhere. Maybe not enough tho, What about frozen daphnia and plankton and stuff? Can they eat those. Or are they too small.
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by grokefish »

Some of the eggs got wooshed out so I scooped them up and they are now in a net in the outlet flow:

Image

Image

Do these eggs look fertile to you guys?

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by apistomaster »

Matt,
Congratulations.
Is it correct that the male is continuing to provide care for most of the eggs but only some were accidentally ejected from the nest?
I prefer breeding in a dedicated spawning tank and allow the fry to remain in the breeding tank until the are sturdy enough to move to their own grow out tank. If this spawn occurred in a community tank it is often easier and more productive to remove them all before they hatch to a separate hatching tank.
A hanging net breeder is usually a better place to hatch a few loose eggs outside the nest.
If the eggs were spawned in a community tank I prefer to place all the eggs in a bare 10 gal tank with 8 to 10 inches of water from the breeding tank. Provide an aged sponge filter plus an air stone. I add a few drops of methylene blue per gallon to the tank with the eggs.
I would be tempted to put all the eggs in this artificial egg hatching tank set up at this time. Just siphon them out into a container then pour them into the hatching/starter tank.
Most of the eggs I could see appeared to be viable but some looked like broken shells of dead or infertile eggs. Not unusual for there to be a few of these.

The eggs will probably hatch 5-6 days after they were laid. I make a series of partial water changes after they hatch so the water isn't dyed dark blue any more.
It may take another 6-7 days for the fry to absorb all their yolk. I would use Spirulina Sticks and earth worm sticks as their first and primary foods. A ratio of 3:1 Spirulina sticks to earth worm sticks, will get the fry off to a good start and make up their staple grow out diet. These two foods have proven to be a very convenient and nutritious for all pleco and Loricariidae fry for me.
I merely adjust the ratios to best reflect the natural diet of species that are primarily carnivorous or herbivorous.
Once the fry are fry swimming give them some rocks and wood for shelter.
I don't create any egg based glop to plaster on to rocks or bother to grow algae on stones.
I am thinking that Chaetostoma eggs kept in the mid 70's*F will take one more day to hatch and becoming free swimming than the warm water plecos/Sturisoma which are what I have had the most experience with artificial hatching.

Amanda aka bronzefry, has some experience with breeding her Chaetostoma.
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by grokefish »

Thanks Larry,
gonna contact Amanda now

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by bronzefry »

Matt,
WOW! Congrats. My breeding was totally accidental and the eggs disappeared as fast as they came. Then, they died due to my inexperience. I'd really like to try them again soon. I've seen eggs w/Ancistrus sp. and L-387s fall out of the nest. They seem to come and get them and do the mad "carwashing" thing and buff them. They seem to know what to do. We're the ones that go crazy. :lol: I've also seen female L-387s sitting on eggs-all 3 adults can't be males unless there's something I don't know. Time will tell if they're fertile. Do you have them in a species tank? If so, the next time, you can just leave them to it. They'll figure things out. Just make sure there are plenty of hiding places, rocks, etc. Keep us posted.
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by grokefish »

They are in more of a biotope tank with some chaetostma cf.millesi

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by apistomaster »

grokefish wrote:They are in more of a biotope tank with some chaetostma cf.millesi

Thanks
Matt
In that case, I think your best option is to allow nature to take it's course. Most plecos do not harm fry and those that get off to a good start in their home tank tend to grow a little faster than those I have artificially hatched.
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Post by grokefish »

Thanks Larry,
The eggs are now scattered all over the tank bottom but strangely enough are being left alone by all the inmates.
You can see the wee fishys developing in the egg but I can't get a good photo.

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Post by bronzefry »

All to do now is wait and learn. If you can, take some notes along the way for things such as pH, hardness, how long it takes the eggs to hatch, etc. It'll keep you from going completely mad. Also remember, this is one of their first attempts(that you've seen). They need to learn, just like we do. It may take them more than once to get the hang of it. Patience is difficult. :wink:
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by apistomaster »

Matt,
If you would like to save these loose eggs they are easy to suck up with a baster and place in a net breeder. After they have absorbed their yolk and appear to be looking for food you should be able to release them back into the tank and have a reasonable chance of them surviving. They are very vulnerable and helpless until they are free swimming.
Because they should spawn again doesn't mean they would.
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by grokefish »

They have hatched!
Uploading video to you tube as I type!

This is the second time they have bred, last time I only found the fry when they were freeswiming and sucking onto stuff, but again I found them whilst doing a major cleaning operation and I think the shock killed them, that and the lima shovel noses maybe :roll:

Any way as soon as the video has finnished uploading I will post again.

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma eggs! Image fixed now! Look! Look!

Post by grokefish »

Here you go folks, speilberg eat your heart out :lol:

You have to look carefully as it's not wriggling much but you can see it better in full screen:


Woohoo!

Matt

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Vidoe, Look! Look!

Post by apistomaster »

Oh, we have Shovel nose cat in with your "Chaetostoma species" tank.
You can forget everything I said about fry survival.
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Post by andywoolloo »

:( oi!! he is eating them!!
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Vidoe, Look! Look!

Post by Farid »

hi there,
i would definetly suck the fry with a airhose and place them in a in hanging tank supplied with tankwater (airsystem) as this is quite a unique moment to have baby chaetostomas.. soon as their jolksack will be finished you will not be able to feed them correctly!! best is to seperate them to have it unter control.

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Vidoe, Look! Look!

Post by grokefish »

Nah the shovel noses went after the last event.
Just

And the parents which are similar to:


Image

and I tell you what the males pectoral spines are very thick and his fins have this dark banding on them just like this photo.

The guppy has been removed to my older boys tetra tank.
My camera is crap, it has only autofocus so it keeps focusing on the glass and not what I am trying to focus on. Which really sucks because you can really see the fish developing in the eggs, which are still scattered unmolested all over the tank floor.

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Vidoe, Look! Look!

Post by Jon »

i have found that young limnivores, specifically, tend to be difficult to feed in large size aquaria. It is best to put them in an enclosure.
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Vidoe, Look! Look!

Post by apistomaster »

Jon wrote:i have found that young limnivores, specifically, tend to be difficult to feed in large size aquaria. It is best to put them in an enclosure.
I agree. The Hypancistrus and Peckoltia species I raise fry are easy to get started in the breeding tank since they eat the same foods as I feed the adults and they are attracted to food by smell quickly.

Sturisoma fry seem to do best if kept in the smallest tank that will support the number of fry long enough to move them to the next larger size but still the smallest that will allow more growth and so on. Those left in a large tanks from the beginning never survive.
Sturisoma are probably the most similar species I breed that that I might consider limnivores except like Chaetostoma, they seem to need a good current. Much more so tan the Hypancisrus and Peckoltia fry although I used one power head driven spnge filter in all their tanks the intensity of the currents used are much less than I use with my Sturisoma fry. Chaetostoma wouldn't be happy in water temperatures of 84 to 86*F I keep Sturisoma at.
I'm sure I sound like a broken record but I recommend feeding them Spirulina Sticks and some earth worm sticks, These are excellent conditioning foods but they also soften to a mush which so far I haven't found a Loricariiadae or Pleco fry that does not thrive on these foods. Consider. I buy and use up 10 pounds of each type of sticks a year. That is in addition to about 70 pounds of frozen Blood worms, weekly live Black worm shipments and a couple 10.5 oz cans of Tetra Color Bits. I have a lot of catfish and large wild Angels and Discus. The two stick foods are much easier to feed in precise amounts and do not foul the water unless there is a case of gross over feeding. One cannot control an egg based pastes dried on rocks once it loosens and enters the water. The egg will deteriorate water quality very easily.
My wild Angels and Discus also eat a lot of earth worm sticks.

That looks like a good sized Chaetostoma, Matt. A larger species than your C. milesi?
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Vidoe, Look! Look!

Post by grokefish »

As it goes I was wandering around my land today and I remembered a pond that I had hidden away for just such an occasion full of rocks and bogwood all with loverly algae and obviously awfuchs all over them.
What about if I pile a load of that in in a couple of days?

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Vidoe, Look! Look!

Post by MatsP »

Adding algified stones/wood sounds like a good plan to me.

You may want to try the trick with the egg & fishfood-painted rocks as well.

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Vidoe, Look! Look!

Post by apistomaster »

IMHO, egg painted rocks will lose all their "goodies" long before baby Chaetostoma will get a clue.
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Vidoe, Look! Look!

Post by grokefish »

Found a casualty on Saturday.
Here are some pictures.

Image

Image

Image

I'm pretty sure that this is a good sign there are others still alive in the tank otherwise there would be more evidence of casualties.

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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Vidoe, Look! Look!

Post by L number Banana »

Any updates on the little dudes? I've been holding my breath since the 15th. :oops:
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Re: Check it out Chaetostoma fry! Vidoe, Look! Look!

Post by grokefish »

Well yes!
Today I was sitting on the sofa watching the tank cos I was bored and a fully operational, fully formed zippy fish about 5mm long shot out of nowhere and started cleaning the glass!
I went and got the camera but as usual the batteries were dead (why are they always dead at times like this) so me and my youngest boy started raiding the remote controls to get 4 usable batteries together and by the time we did the little fella scootled off somewhere!
Batteries are on charge now and so I aint missing it next time.

I reckon there's a few of them in there.

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